570 likes | 680 Views
World History. Chapter Five “Rome & Rise of Christianity” 600 B.C. – A.D. 500. Section One : The Rise of Rome. Objectives. 1 . Discuss how the Romans conquered the plain of Latium, the Italian peninsula & then the entire Mediterranean world.
E N D
World History • Chapter Five “Rome & Rise of Christianity” • 600 B.C. – A.D. 500
Objectives • 1. Discuss how the Romans conquered the plain of Latium, the Italian peninsula & then the entire Mediterranean world. • 2. Explain how the Romans maintained control over their conquered lands.
I. The Land & Peoples of Italy • Italy is a peninsula about 750 miles long • Apennine Mts. run down the middle • Located in the Mediterranean Sea
The Land & Peoples of Italy • 3 important plains for farming • 1. Po River • 2. plain of Latium, where Rome is located • 3. plain of Campania
A. The Impact of Geography • Rome located 18 miles inland on the Tiber River • Easy access to the sea but safe from pirates • Built on 7 hills
The Impact of Geography • Italian peninsula was a natural stopping point for trade & travel • Important position in the Mediterranean
B. The Peoples of Italy • 1500 to 1000 B.C. / Latins • Indo-European group who settled in Latium • Herders & farmers
The Peoples of Italy • 800 B.C. / Etruscans • Turned Rome from a village into a city & gave Romans their mode of dress – toga & short cloak • Organization of the Roman army
The Peoples of Italy • Greeks settled in southern Italy / Sicily • Gave the Roman their alphabet & artistic models of sculpture, architecture & literature
II. The Roman Republic • Early Rome ruled by kings, some Etruscan • 509 B.C. overthrew the last Etruscan king • Republic – a form of government in which the leader is not a monarch & certain citizens have the right to vote
A. War & Conquest • Enemies surrounded Rome • 264 B.C. defeated the states of Latium, the Greeks in the south & the last Etruscan settlements in the north
War & Conquest • Roman confederation • Latins had full citizenship • Other groups were allies who controlled their local affairs, but gave soldiers • Such people could become Roman citizens
B. Why Rome Was Successful • 3 virtues: duty, courage & discipline • Livy Roman historian Cincinnatus gave examples
Why Rome Was Successful • Good diplomats • Extending Roman citizenship & allowing states to run internal affairs • Skilled persistent soldiers & brilliant strategists
Why Rome Was Successful • Built towns & connected them with roads • Allowing soldiers to be deployed quickly • Law & politics, Roman were practical & created institutions that responded to problems
III. The Roman State • Distrusted kingship • Built a different form of government
A. The Government of Rome • Two groups: • 1. Patricians – great landowners, who became Rome’s ruling class • 2. Plebeians – landholders, craftspeople, merchants & small farmers • Only patricians elected to public office
The Government of Rome • Chief executive officers • Consuls (2) – ran the government & led the Roman army into battle • Praetors – in charge of civil law
The Government of Rome • Senate, about 300 patricians served for life • Centuriate assembly, elected consuls & praetors & passed laws • Organized by classes based on wealth
B. The Struggle of the Orders • Plebeians wanted political & social equality • Fought in the army to protect Rome
The Struggle of the Orders • 471 B.C. Council of the plebs createdOfficials called the Tribunes of the plebs empowered to protect the plebeians • 287 B.C. Council received the right to pass laws • Still dominated by wealthy ruling class
C. Roman Law • First code of law, Twelve Tables • Law of Nations, dealt with Roman & non-Roman legal questions • Standards of justice applied to all people equally & used principles recognized today
about 100 years the adoption of “The Twelve Tablets” 509 B.C.
Law of Nations • Innocent until proven otherwise • The accused has a right to a defense before a judge • Judges should decide cases based on evidence
IV. Rome Conquers the Mediterranean • Faced a strong power in Carthage • Had a large trading empire • Began a long struggle in 264 B.C. to control the Mediterranean
A. The First Punic War • Rome vs. Carthage • Rome defeated Carthage in a navy battle in 241 B.C. • Sicily became Rome’s first province
The First Punic War • Sent Hannibal the greatest Carthaginian general to start the second Punic War
B. The Second Punic War • Hannibal brought war to the Romans • Entered Spain moved east crossing the Alps • 40,000 men, 6,000 horses & elephants